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Another Mid-Life Awakening

September 17th, 2011
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She sat upright with perfect posture displaying firm breasts that faced forward effortlessly as a German Short-haired Pointer. With full lips, the kind thin-lipped women attempt to replicate surgically, but regretfully result in a ‘come what may’ platypus pout, she extended her bronzed, toned legs, smiled and giggled. The perfect perfume, the perfect designer shoes and hair so expertly styled as if she were ready to hit the Paris Fashion Week runway, she filled the room.

Occasionally bumping elbows slumped one next to her donning wrinkled, elastic-waist kakis, chipped toenail polish and a stained GAP ball cap obviously hiding roots that were screaming for a touch up. With pale, puffy calves peeking out from tattered Capri’s and blending into a buttered popcorn-grease stained seat, I observed her out of the corner of my eye.

I had lost interest in the movie. Glancing sideways as if there was something worth noticing, I took inventory of this faultless reproduction of a young Cybil Sheppard crossed with a pinch of Bo Derek (name’s only my generation will recognize) while I, with popcorn kernels nuzzled between my slightly whitened teeth wondered, “What the hell has happened here”?!? And I was curious. “How does she do that…and sit up so straight and make it look so natural”?

I sat reeling in Youth as it wafted from her pores. It was like an out-of-reach dream of a time long ago when all my joints worked together holding up unyielding flesh as it bounced from perch to perch without the now, all too familiar joggle, wiggle and waggle.

So, in the glow of the big screen, I sat up a bit straighter and made a vow to myself to get back to the gym thinking for a moment that this would perhaps alter time’s cruel corporeal erosion. Instead I felt jealous and sad. And I would love to say in this moment I gleaned a morsel of encouraging insight from this unkind awakening about accepting this thing termed as ‘best time of your life’. Instead I comforted myself with the thought, “She probably can’t spell and has trouble reading the Huffington Post”…

But then again, I must admit there was a voice in the back of my mind reminding me if I do want this to be the ‘best time of my life’, all I have is the ‘Right Now’…

because the ‘Was Then’ can make me sad…

and the ‘What Is To Come’ incite fear.

And isn’t it true that adjusting perceptions in the ‘Right Now’ can bring about the most amazing gratitude?

I’ll adjust tomorrow. My “Right Now’ is still pissed and confused.

 

 

 

 

Menopause, Mid Life Madness, Musings, Road Blocks and Detours , ,

Another Mid-Life Awakening

September 17th, 2011
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She sat upright with perfect posture displaying firm breasts that faced forward effortlessly as a German Short-haired Pointer. With full lips, the kind thin-lipped women attempt to replicate surgically, but regretfully result in a ‘come what may’ platypus pout, she extended her bronzed, toned legs, smiled and giggled. The perfect perfume, the perfect designer shoes and hair so expertly styled as if she were ready to hit the Paris Fashion Week runway, she filled the room.

Occasionally bumping elbows slumped one next to her donning wrinkled, elastic-waist kakis, chipped toenail polish and a stained GAP ball cap obviously hiding roots that were screaming for a touch up. With pale, puffy calves peeking out from tattered Capri’s and blending into a buttered popcorn-grease stained seat, I observed her out of the corner of my eye.

I had lost interest in the movie. Glancing sideways as if there was something worth noticing, I took inventory of this faultless reproduction of a young Cybil Sheppard crossed with a pinch of Bo Derek (name’s only my generation will recognize) while I, with popcorn kernels nuzzled between my slightly whitened teeth wondered, “What the hell has happened here”?!? And I was curious. “How does she do that…and sit up so straight and make it look so natural”?

I sat reeling in Youth as it wafted from her pores. It was like an out-of-reach dream of a time long ago when all my joints worked together holding up unyielding flesh as it bounced from perch to perch without the now, all too familiar joggle, wiggle and waggle.

So, in the glow of the big screen, I sat up a bit straighter and made a vow to myself to get back to the gym thinking for a moment that this would perhaps alter time’s cruel corporeal erosion. Instead I felt jealous and sad. And I would love to say in this moment I gleaned a morsel of encouraging insight from this unkind awakening about accepting this thing termed as ‘best time of your life’. Instead I comforted myself with the thought, “She probably can’t spell and has trouble reading the Huffington Post”…

But then again, I must admit there was a voice in the back of my mind reminding me if I do want this to be the ‘best time of my life’, all I have is the ‘Right Now’…

because the ‘Was Then’ can make me sad…

and the ‘What Is To Come’ incite fear.

And isn’t it true that adjusting perceptions in the ‘Right Now’ can bring about the most amazing gratitude?

I’ll adjust tomorrow. My “Right Now’ is still pissed and confused.

 

 

 

 

Menopause, Mid Life Madness, Musings, Road Blocks and Detours ,

Bullied and Living Somewhere Above My Head

June 23rd, 2011

Lady Gaga was on The View a couple weeks ago talking about how as a kid she had been bullied. Taunted, being dumped in garbage cans and the recipient of all out cruelty was a part of her daily life. She told the ladies on the show that even now in the midst of super stardom, she still suffers from enormous low self-esteem. A necessary and daily ritual for Ms. Gaga includes looking at herself in the mirror while saying, “You are a superstar” to aid in altering her self-perceptions of ‘loserdom’ to this new reality of stardom.

I don’t have an awful lot in common with Lady Gaga except I too was daily bullied both at school and at home. And with the subject of bullying now gaining greater awareness and being addressed in a wider public arena, I have increasingly become more aware of the impact it has had in my own life.

I was a big child both in height and girth. Daily called names such as, Blubberbutt, Fatso, Pearbottom, Ugly, and the ever witty, “Do you have a license to be pregnant?” …I marched seemingly unaffected and unresponsive through my days. Physical harm was not uncommon for me. I have sharp and poignant memories of sixth grade recess and the game Prisonball.  Wherein when a player is hit with the red rubber ball (which hurt like hell) by the opposing team, the player then goes to ‘prison’ and is out of the game. And game after game, I seemed to be the first one in prison and sometimes was the only one. Alas, even in this state of incarceration within the painted yellow chipped boundary lines, I did not gain relief from receiving violent red rubber ball pelts over and over from the cruel bullies. I would huddle against the cold cement wall protecting my head in my arms accompanied by colorful name-calling and just take it. No complaints, never told a teacher nor anyone at home. I just quietly took it. I never considered there was another way.

Day after day, I now know living in this non-feeling and unresponsive state of being, gave me the ability to cope. I was able to detach, disassociate and what I call “live somewhere above my head”. I don’t remember crying, being angry or planning any kind of retaliation. While I have many stories from the land of ‘Bullydom’, there is only one incident I can remember that elicited crying myself to sleep.

The eighth grade party. David N. was hosting an end of the year party at his house and even though by that time, I had lost weight, replaced my coke bottle glasses with contacts and could have easily been mistaken for a young fashion model, I was not, nor were a couple others of the ‘unwanted’, invited to the festive celebration. All night I truly believed that David just plain forgot to invite me and somehow my name had been mistakenly overlooked.

I lay in bed fighting sleep, as I just knew he was going to call or show up any minute to repent of his oversight and sweep me away and into the loving, waiting and remorseful arms of my classmates. And that night when my fantasy disintegrated into a painful reality I wept year’s worth of tears and the message that I wasn’t wanted, didn’t belong, wasn’t good enough, pretty enough, et al, and was seared into my little soul.

It would take blogs and blogs to write about how events like this shaped my perceptions and my character. Fortunately now there is an abundance of research and materials available providing help and information regarding bullying. Mark Dombeck, Ph.D. states, “The experience of being bullied can end up causing lasting damage to victims.” www.mentalhelp.net and a quote from www.futurity.com, “Bullying dampens academic success”.

And as many articles stating the devastating effects of bullying, now exist abundant resources offering help and guidance for its victims:”Dealing with bullies can be difficult”, states www.how-to-stop-bullying.com.  Self esteem has much to do with how to deal with a bully, empowerment being key in helping to preserve a healthy self esteem.”

I was unaware I was even being bullied and never gave it a thought to attempt to change my situation and or stand up for myself. And after years of a veritable buffet of therapies and self-help groups, the most nagging and prevalent character challenge I face today is, to ‘stay in the game’, present in my mind and body and avoid the living “somewhere above my head”. Just to feel my feet on the ground, breathe the air into my lungs and hear the sound of my own laughter sometimes requires a clear and conscious choice. It is far more familiar to sleepwalk through my days.

Now, I believe positives can always be extracted from negatives. And in regards to myself and living a life well bullied, this is my creed: I will always, always fight for the picked-on discarded underdogs that grace the school yards and walk the halls filled with the adolescent masses. I will stand up for the unsightly and unwanted that breathe the same air as the preferred and privileged.  In my book, they’re the hero’s. The ones who may cry themselves to sleep or feel rage or feel nothing or stand up or fight back.  They are the ones who all of Heaven applauds as “God is near to the broken hearted and saves those crushed in spirit”.

To you who are being bullied, please speak up, be a tattletale and don’t be afraid. You are worth helping and never, ever believe a word they say!

 

Menopause

Everybody Has A Story

March 18th, 2011
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Everybody has a story. This thought keeps running through my mind as I sit in the waiting room at the VA where my husband is getting his first chemo treatment.

I sit with an elderly veteran in a wheelchair. He looks so alone. I ask him if he’s up next to receive his chemo treatment and he turns his wheelchair toward me and begins to tell me of his life, his cancer, grown kids and daily activities.

I did not ask him for these details but the phrase keeps whispering into my soul, “Everybody has a story”. So I listen at first feigning a genuine interest and then becoming genuinely interested. With my questions and comments he weaves a brief tapestry of his days, struggles and achievements.

When the nurse calls his name, he flashes me a smile and I had made a new friend.

Be it in the elevator, waiting in line, at the ball game or a visit to the dentist, everybody has a story, be it the brief or extended version. But the question is, who is willing listen? Price to pay? A little time. Payoff? Human connection and an activated soul.

 

Menopause

To Hormone or Not to Hormone, That Apparently Seems to be the Question

November 9th, 2010
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Could I be any more confused about Hormone Replacement Therapy? Is taking hormones safe for us? First it’s a “Yes”, then “No”, then  ”Yes”, then “Maybe”, then “How should I know?”, followed with a “We think so” and finally, “Sit down, shut up and eat your dinner.”

At least that’s what it feels like! How many reports have been unveiled in the last 20 years regarding the safety and efficacy of HRT and each time the latest reports are released they seem to be the complete opposite of the previous findings!

Who should we be listening to? Movie stars? MD’s? Naturopathic Doctors? Our mothers? There’s a guy down the street that cleans offices at night that seems to be well versed in the subject…!

After extensive findings it was reported a few years ago that HRT was safe with a low percentage of women at risk if breast cancer was in their family. A month ago HRT now seems to be the cause of cancer in women and many gals I know frantically threw out their ‘happy pills, patches and creams’. A week ago Dr. Oz comes out and says (loosely stated), ‘Now, now no need to be hasty, they really aren’t that bad for you’…! I even heard a talk show guest blanketing Estrogen on causing Lung Cancer! When questioned, she did happen to mention that she had been smoking for 30 years. But the Estrogen caused the cancer. Uh huh.

What I know first hand is they work for me. I sleep better, feel better, and my husband seems to likes me more! http://www.planetsweetpea.com/ron.html

So here, to set the record straight, from Dr. Tori Hudson, a leader in women’s health: http://www.planetsweetpea.com/news.html

So let’s lift a glass for those of us hormonally challenged and declare, “Here’s to Hormone, or not to hormone maybe next year we will have the answer!

Menopause, Mid Life Madness, Signs & Symptoms

Harrison Ford, My New Best Friend

June 13th, 2010
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I’m challenged to write something blog-worthy. They say write what you know so here we go. An odd not-your-everyday-type of thing happened to me the other day. Coming out of a sparsely populated Starbucks with my grande coffee topped with whipped cream in hand, I looked up and there was Harrison Ford looking at me saying, ‘Hi’. I said ‘Hi’ back and walked on by. I had no idea how to handle this situation as I did not take ‘Running Into Giant Movie Stars 101′ in college. I figured he didn’t want to be bothered so off I went. Of course I texted, Facebooked and Twittered everyone that Harrison Ford just said ‘Hi’ to meeeeee!

A couple days later I thought maybe I had made a mistake and it was someone that just looked like him. So I googled his name and found out sure enough he is making a movie here in our city.

Now, here is what I think may be blog-worthy: I am amused by where my head conversations have taken me, “Dang, I should have said something like, Welcome to our city; How are ya?; Whatz up?; Dude what are you doing here?; Do you like being a movie star?” …or maybe inviting him and Calista over for dinner. Let’s see, what should I make?A barbeque! Can’t go wrong with hamburgers!…you get the idea. I play it over and over in my head. Reliving the moment our eyes locked and he gave me a “Hi” with that crooked little smile.

OK enough of that. Here’s what I’m pondering, what is it about most of us common folk that has an intense desire to be seen, recognized and noticed by someone who is seen, recognized and noticed? It happens all the time with the fanatic seekers of autographs fueled by the millions of sales in movie star magazines with the latest forbidden photo snapped by the paparazzi. Don’t tell me that if you ran into Harrison Ford today and he gave you that crooked smile that you would not be agog and either left speechless or embarrass yourself by saying one of the head-verbages mentioned above.

They’re just people like you and me with very unique jobs that make them incredibly rich and famous. Other than that, like you and me…

I have no answers for my pondering’s and this is not the first time I have run into a mega movie star and had it flip me around affording amusing introspection.  So, what would you do? Do you have a plan? Cause you just never know, Harrison Ford may be your next best friend!

Menopause

The Latest in HRT With Dr. Tori Hudson Part II

April 21st, 2010
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Let’s go back to delivery methods.  We have these different kinds of hormones: semi-synthetic, synthetic, bioidentical, (bioidentical from a pharmaceutical company, or bioidentical from a compounding pharmacy.) That is one little clarification we should articulate again here because those are both the same and different.  Pharmaceutical companies have a few select bioidentical hormones. There is Estradiol by itself, it comes either generic or Estrace in a pill, or we have the estrogen-only patches which are actually bioidentical estradiol. Vivelle and Climara and Menostar are examples of those.  And then we have a bioidentical cream called Estrace cream.  Those are all actually made by pharmaceutical companies.  But the pharmaceutical companies only make available a small handful of doses and very select methods of delivery.  Also with the pharmaceutical company comes their patented preservative, or binder, or filler or adhesive, because, you can not actually patent the bio-identical hormone itself.  So you have to patent something special that you do to that hormone.  We are left with the limitations of the pharmaceutical company bioidentical hormones in dosing, combinations delivery methods.

Now, at our clinic, and what most people who are really accustomed to prescribing bioidentical hormones do, is they use specialty compounding pharmacies.  Because now, we can prescribe all customized and individual doses.  Maybe you don’t need just the .5, or the 1 or the 2 milligram that the pharmaceutical company makes.  We think you would do just as well with .25 or we need to tweak it a little bit and give you .35.  So, we can customize your dose and titrate the dose up or down.  We can also customize a combination.  No pharmaceutical company yet makes a combination of bioidentical estradiol with bioidentical progesterone.  They also don’t make a combination bio-identical estrogen/progesterone formula that has the testosterone in it.  So we can now individually prepare a formulation that has not only the bioidentical hormones but the select interim specific doses that we want, and in specialty combinations. And we can use other hormones that we are interested in like estriol or DHEA that have their own added benefits.  In addition, we can do this in pills, in capsules, in sublingual lozenges, in sublingual drops, in creams, in gels, in vaginal, in topical deliveries.  We have so many more variability’s and circumstances and ways that we can help women by utilizing these compounding pharmacies than by just sticking with what the pharmaceutical companies provide.  But they are, in fact, the same hormones, if we are talking about bioidentical hormones, the commercial pharmaceutical products and the compounded products have the same benefits and the same risks.  It’s just that we have a lot more flexibility, a lot more individualization, a lot more circumstances that we can help with these compounding of specialty formulations.

Dr. Tori Hudson         For excellent HRT information go to:     http://drtorihudson.com/

Menopause

The Latest in HRT with Dr. Tori Hudson Part I

April 14th, 2010
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Transcript from the DVD “Blitzed by Menopause”:

Many of you are wondering about hormone replacement therapy and have all kinds of questions. I can really appreciate that because there really are lots of questions to ask and lots of questions to be answered.  We want to try to address all of the different kinds of hormones that are available, the different dosing issues, combinations of hormones, delivery methods of hormones, and some pros and cons and benefits and risks of hormones.  That is kind of the territory at which I think most all the questions lie.

So lets start first with all of the different kinds of hormones.  And by the way, we are talking about hormones here, we are not talking about herbs that have constituents called phytoestrogens.  We are talking about hormones, and there are hormones of all kinds.  Some are made from a natural substance and some are made from a natural substance and then turned into various kinds of hormones, and some are semi-synthetic or synthetic.

Let’s start with hormones that are made from a natural substance.  Starting with even Premarin, the kind of hormone or estrogen that has been around for the very longest amount of time.  It’s called Premarin.  It’s actually made from a “gamoosh” you might say of hormones found in the urine of pregnant mares.  And that is why they call it Premarin. Pre-Mare-In.  Pregnant Mare’s Urine.  So, these are technically a natural substance, but they aren’t identical to the human hormones, so therefore we call them semi-synthetic really.

There are also hormones that are made from a natural substance and in these cases, plants.  They extract two different ingredients out of either Mexican wild yam or soybeans.  And then they turn that substance in a manufacturing laboratory, into a hormone.  Now, we can turn that into a hormone that is not chemically identical to the human hormones, or we can turn those constituents into a hormone that is identical to the human hormones. And those hormones are ones that often receive a lot of press and attention often, and are called bioidentical hormones. A bioidentical hormone is a hormone that is derived from a plant constituent, but turned into a hormone that is biochemically identical to the woman’s hormones.  Thus, bioidentical, or biochemically identical.

But you can also take these same constituents out of a plant and turn them into a hormone that is not biochemically identical.  And many pharmaceutical options are these kinds of hormones.  And again, I kind of call those more quasi-synthetic.  So, so far we have the Premarin which is from the estrogens in pregnant mares’ urine, not biochemically identical.  We have bioidentical, plant derived, chemically identical to human hormones.  And we have plant derived that are not chemically identical to human hormones.  And then we have just bona fide synthetics that are also made by pharmaceutical companies.  Those are essentially kind of the four different categories of the different kinds of hormones that are available to women.  And some of those are actually available to men as well.  Testosterone, for example.  We have a bioidentical testosterone and we have a synthetic testosterone.  And the bioidentical testosterone available to women is currently only available from a compounding pharmacy.

For example, we can prescribe testosterone to women and to men.  It’s just that there’s not a bioidentical testosterone product available to women and there’s not even a synthetic testosterone prescription available to women as a stand alone prescription.  The pharmaceutical companies have not been allowed to produce a testosterone-only product for women yet.  They have been allowed to produce that for men.  So for women, when we want to prescribe testosterone, we have to go to a compounding pharmacy. And we can prescribe either the bioidentical testosterone or the methyltestosterone.  And we prescribe those in pills or in creams.  Testosterone is an important hormone when it comes to sexual function.  We use a bioidentical testosterone cream from a compounding pharmacy, which is a specialty pharmacy, and we put that in a cream, according to a certain dose, and it is applied to the external genital area right before sex to enhance arousal and orgasm.  We can also put this bioidentical testosterone or synthetic testosterone into a specially prepared compounded combination of hormones: estrogens, progesterone, and testosterone, for addressing sexual function as well as other menopause symptoms.  When we want to prescribe testosterone to a woman, we have to currently use a compounding pharmacy with one exception: there is a synthetic estrogen with a synthetic testosterone called Estratest, made by a pharmaceutical company.

Part II coming soon…

Menopause

The Signs and Symptoms of Menopause with Dr. Tori Hudson Final

April 8th, 2010
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Often women ask me the question is, “How long is this going to last, Dr. Hudson?” and “When is this going to end Dr. Hudson?” and I wish I could answer that question. “It’s only going to last this amount of time”, but the truth is I can not discern this.  It’s unpredictable.  It’s different for all of us.  The severity is different for each of us, the duration is different for each of us, which symptoms we have on this long list of potential symptoms is different for each of us.

But, on an average, according to the research, menopause symptoms for seventy five to ninety percent of women last four to seven years.  Now, there’s the ten to twenty five percent of women for whom that’s different.  And we don’t know if at year three, at year four or at year seven if you are going to be on your way out of these symptoms or are you going to be one of these ten to twenty five percent that is going to last longer.  There is no way to really know that.

We are trying to get some understanding.  If you’ve had severe PMS, it seems to have some prediction on menopause being more severe.  That’s one thing we seem to see a correlation with now.  But unfortunately, we can’t really predict what your menopause is going to be like, let alone, can we predict how long it’s going to last.  But we can work with the law of averages and try to give some reassurance. And most symptoms are temporary in most women.

The problem is there’s the women that are not “most women” and the problem is that there are a few symptoms that tend to be progressive, like vaginal dryness, vaginal thinning, urinary incontinence, that set of symptoms tends to get worse with time because that tissue gets more consequences as it is deprived of estrogen for a longer period of time.  But most other things, symptoms, not bone loss, not some of those things, but symptoms, most of those are temporary in most women.

So far we don’t have any strong connections as to what your mother’s menopause was like in telling us what our menopause is going to be like.  And also, a lot of forty, fifty something year old women now who are just going through this key menopause time have mothers that in their generation, many health problems were solved by removing the uterus and the ovaries.  We have more progressive surgeries now, many more medical options, so the doctors and patients don’t have to choose that as often.  But, for some of us, we don’t know what our mother’s menopause would have been like anyway because she went through it in a rather unnatural fashion by having suddenly her ovaries removed.  And of course hormones were prescribed more easily, less judiciously, you might say, back in those days as well.  It’s more selective now, more weighing the benefits and the risk and more desire on the part of the practitioner to use hormones for the shorter amount of time mostly in this sort of temporary window of symptoms.

For men, if your partner is going through menopause, you might wonder what you can do to be helpful.  And the first thing I think to maybe look at it in terms of your previous experience with your partner is, have you already been through years or months or decades of PMS? And how that has been going and what that has asked of you.  It’s similar.

You know I think many men can find it very difficult and challenging to have empathy and really understand what is going on with their partner during this time of menopause changes.  And I empathize with that.  It’s a challenge, because often you don’t know what to expect, and you don’t know if it’s you or if it’s them.  If it’s them is it some character defect or is it a health problem.  I would just really encourage men to try to learn as much as they can about menopause and I would encourage men to ask their wives and partners questions and really kind of try to bring forth your best inquisitive self.  You’re curious.  You are asking questions, you are wanting to understand.  I think that’s a useful approach because chances are, she’s not faking it.  Chances are, she’s not lying to you about what’s going on with her. Chances are she’s really needing some help.  And if she’s had a difficult time with PMS, and that’s already been challenging for the family, it’s very similar here.  The mood swings…if it’s been difficult to deal with a teenager and their hormonal changes, it’s very similar.  It requires us being more patient, it requires us being more caring, maybe even anticipating, much like you would if someone you knew didn’t feel well.  You just try to do a little TLC.  You try to do a little bit to help out here and there and even just the littlest things can make a really huge difference.  A little piece of dark chocolate under the pillow, or “can I help you with the dishes tonight”.  “It looks like you’ve had a really hard day”.  Just a little extra and I would gather that would come back in a favorable way to you.

And I know that we want things to be balanced in relationships and you don’t want to feel like you are always trying to compensate for what seems to be not going well with your partner but men have hormonal changes too and generally that comes a little bit later and looks a bit different.  But I think just this inquisitiveness, trying to learn yourself, bring forth your best questions and empathy, I think that’s what my advice would be.

Our thanks to Dr. Hudson. For more information visit us at: www.planetsweetpea.com.

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A Rhyme For All Seasons

March 23rd, 2010
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Entering Spring. Awakenings after a seemingly endless sleep.

Entering Midlife. Wishing for sleep that’s encumbered by seemingly endless awakenings.


Beholding Spring.  Air laced with lilac as budding leaves shimmer.

Beholding Midlife.  Doubt encircling dreams as the present clouds the future.


Menopause. Who the hell cares.

Menopause Rap

Menopause, Mid Life Madness, Musings , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,